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Vibe

Vibe


Other Views:
Publisher: Vibe

List Price: $47.88
Buy New: $14.95
You Save: $32.93 (69%)



Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 29 reviews
Sales Rank: 220

Format: Magazine Subscription
Type: Consumer magazine
Subscription Issues: 12
Subscription Length: 12 Months
Issues Per Year: 12
First Issue Lead Time: 6-10 Weeks

ASIN: B00005N7TE

Release Date: November 23, 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months

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Editorial Reviews:

From Amazon.com
Slicker and more uptown than competitors The Source and XXL, Vibe covers hip-hop culture in its many forms. The primary focus, of course, is music, but urban fashion also receives lavish treatment, and each issue contains a least a dash of movies, technology, sports, and politics. Celebrities tend to dominate its well-photographed and well-designed pages, but there's also room for more substantive fare (such as a touching report on "chickenheads"--rap-world groupies--who deserve better than they get from their often-abusive lovers). Covering a culture that is frequently misogynistic and homophobic, Vibe is both women- and gay-friendly, and surprisingly broad in its interpretation of who's cool enough for hip-hop: Elton John (for his Grammy duet with Eminem), maverick senator Jim Jeffords, and Seattle Mariners baseball star Ichiro Suzuki. --Keith Moerer

Product Description
Vibe, the nation's leading hip-hop magazine, drops the hottest in music, fashion, sports, art, technology and entertainment every month. Connect yourself to the beat of the street and stay one up on urban scenes across the county - NYC, D.C, Chi-town, L.A., Houston, Atlanta, and Miami - from wherever you are.


Customer Reviews:   Read 24 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Lost its vibe years ago, but it's still worth reading   October 9, 2002
E.J. Rupert (Milwaukee, WI)
23 out of 27 found this review helpful

Frankly, as another reviewer said, the magazine was doper (and larger in size, I might add) back in the early '90's. And ever since I read this, I noticed a few things: they hate MTV, they love BET, they hate Nas and his affiliates, they LOVE Jay-Z. The real reason to run and buy this magazine is for the "20 Questions", but back in the '90s all of the questions were funny. Now, only one or two of them are funny while the rest don't even make sense. Not to mention that they only put artists on the cover who went multiplatinum (i.e., Jay-Z never made the cover until 1998). But I still read the magazine for its START section that interviews up-and-coming acts and for the fact that it distances itself from other urban magazines by featuring non-hiphop artists like No Doubt and Lenny Kravitz. The Revolution sections are okay, but truthfully, their reviewers dislike anything that isn't Jay-Z, Dr. Dre, or Mary J. Blige.


2 out of 5 stars As Cherelle sang, "Looks ain't everything!"   March 22, 2003
Reginald D. Garrard (Camilla, GA USA)
15 out of 17 found this review helpful

'Just renewed my subscription so that my fourteen-year-old niece can keep abreast of trends in hip-hop. To my amazement there wasn't very much to "keep abreast" of, at least musically.

When a magazine is 2/3 advertising, it falls short in the content department.

"VIBE", with its pages filled with hunks and babes in various degrees of undress, is nothing more than a Madison Avenue pawn, catering to a generation obsessed with appearances and status.

To my generation "BLING! BLING" just doesn't cut it!


4 out of 5 stars A decent staple of urban culture.   June 6, 2002
The Groove (Boston, MA)
12 out of 15 found this review helpful

Within its few years since inception, Vibe magazine has grown to be a staple in urban/hip-hop culture. To its credit, Vibe covers considerable ground: r&b, neo soul, hip hop and reggae. Its focus is music, but it also reaches out to cinema, current events, sports, and television. Apparently, Vibe isn't afraid to push the envelope and tackle non-mainstream issues: they even did an article on hip hop culture in the Black gay community, which ended up being one of the very best articles the magazine has published. While Vibe is often guilty of hyping "hot" artists that are of dubious quality (Ashanti, Destiny's Child, etc), they also feature articles on talented artists that have yet to make it big. Overall, this magazine comes with my stamp of approval.


3 out of 5 stars You've lost that VIBE...   February 9, 2004
Anthony Rupert (Milwaukee, WI)
11 out of 11 found this review helpful

Frankly, there isn't much I can say that hasn't already been said by everyone else, but all the people that gave Vibe magazine less than four stars are pretty accurate. What was once a great urban magazine is now just an okay magazine. The articles were great, all twenty of the 20 Questions were funny (or if not that, accurate); even the magazine itself was larger. But now all that has changed.

The articles are still pretty decent, but very seldom are they actually about music. I mean, sure, it's good to cover wrongful beatings of people and what not, but I thought this was a music magazine. Also, now the artist on the cover usually has an article that is only about two or three pages long, as opposed to longer stories by other artists - or other TOPICS in general. And the Revolutions (reviews) section is something I can do without. When the reviewers don't like an album, they never go into detail. Basically, they just say it's bad; they don't say WHY. And nowadays when I read 20 Questions, most of them will make me say, "Man, you must've been bored."

Vibe is still an okay magazine, but it needs to get its vibe back to keep readers interested.

Anthony Rupert


4 out of 5 stars OVERLY GLOSSY YET STILL EFFECTIVE   May 6, 2002
10 out of 13 found this review helpful

I remember cleary back in November 1995 when I got my first issue of VIBE in the mail.It was the December 1995/January 1996
issue with Whitney Houston on the cover.I was loving this magazine.Yes it was a lot like an "urban Rolling Stone" but it was smart,hip,diverse,and intriging.Founded by Quincy Jones in 1993,VIBE has been a more stylish,hipper alternative to the more street,keep-it-real The Source and it has succeed.

From that Whitney Houston issue to this day,I've been an avid reader of VIBE,it's my first-choice music magazine.It especially
thirved when Danyel Smith became the Editor In Cheif from November 1997 to November 1999 as it became even more wordly and intriguing.Not to mention,the stunning photos and informative aricles,helpful reviews,and political columns but then VIBE got a little soft on me when former fashion editor Emil Wilibekin became the Editor In Chief.As Wilibekin became the E-I-C,VIBE has become very glossy and prissy.Very woman-friendly and gay-friendly(that's not necessaraly a bad thing though).With glossy fashion spreads galore and a just overall
prissy vibe(no pun intended).That turns me off.I also don't care how the Revolutions(the review section) is so skimed down and less informative.VIBE is one of the main reasons I became a reviewer on Amazon.com,their reviews used to be honest and well-intended but these days they aren't so effective anymore and not that many big hip hop releases are even reviewed anymore(which is good in a way since it's helping the readers discover more
less well-known,adventrous sounds).

Even with it's in it's overly slick state these days,VIBE is still the best music magazine on the market.XXL may be more down and more informative and The Source may be righteous,and the promising Blender may be more music-guided but VIBE will always the first-choice music magazine for me for like Mr. Knyte said
it inspired me to take my dreams of journalism(especially music journalism) higher and for now,seven years it's lifted my sprits
and always kept me intrigued.


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